T
Truelight
Guest
I'm probably getting in over my head here in such a "techy" discussion, but I hafta ask this one... If we are truely comparing film v.s. digital technolgy for quality here, what is the point in -scanning- the film?? Show me a print made from a digital camera and printed using digital equipment and then show me the same print made from the film negative and processed traditionally with chemical methods. You don't doubt that the film-based print will still look better?
All bets are off when we scan (digitize) the negative. What you see then is the quality of the scanner, not what can be done when working with traditional film methods.
Just my 2-bits (bytes?)
Rick Ohnsman
[email protected]
All bets are off when we scan (digitize) the negative. What you see then is the quality of the scanner, not what can be done when working with traditional film methods.
Just my 2-bits (bytes?)
Rick Ohnsman
[email protected]
That I know to be a common misconception. You're not seing the grain.The D# pictures don't show out of focus effects or camera movement. They
were scanned by a Nikon LS-2000 if I'm reading the caption right. I've
never encountered the beast but it does seem to resolve the grain. Look
at the blue sky, for instance.
The grain of the 200 is larger and clumpier than the 100 and both show
well.
You're seing the interference pattern between the grain and the "sampling
matrix" of the scanner (LS200). On a Polaroid SprintScan 4000 (4000 dpi)
you would see a different pattern. The ASA100 grain is really resolved at
6000 ... 8000 dpi.
Well you have looked at the URL I mentioned which shows what scans lookI think there wasn't a lot more in those 35mm camera images to be
brought out.
like at really high dpi. To put two and two together, those images are
not really representative of what film can do.
While of course we all don't own a drum scanner (we wish!Clark's stuff is very interesting. It sure proves that you can get more
detail from a good scan, but my own experience with PhotoCD's is more
like the D# results than like Clark's. We all can't own a drum scanner
so the practical equivalent is more like the $1000 film scanner., it is not
legitimate to drag the today's scanner limitations to the judgement of
film. In a few years, those same frames could be scanned on Polaroid or
Nikon or Minolta scanners with much, much higher resolution and dynamic
film, which will bring more of the detail that the film frames captured
would keep. That's the film quality headroom advantage - while one may
not need or be able to afford to capture the full information on film, as
scanners get better, better and better images could be retrieved. By
contrast when one takes a digital image, not much can be done. FRactals
and other interpolative algorithms can do some, but, looking at the URL I
mentioned, I doubt they'll do as much as what a higher resolution scan
can retrieve (up to say 10000 dpi).
I do, yesIf that affordable gizmo won't make our film efforts much better than a 3
megapixel digital camera, why bother? No processing flaws, emulsion
dings, scratches, fingerprints, dust or spit on a digital picture (don't
ya hate it when you were just trying to blow off that eyelash and...).I have to buy those compressed air cans which is an expense.
Well one can screw up any image. Many photographers don't hold their
digital or film cameras steady enough to obtain the sharpest picture
possible. Many other types of mistakes are made. However, incompetence
does not affect what the medium is capable of when used properly.
Depending what one wants to do with the images, digital cameras may
eliminate some steps and make others more streamlined and more
convenient. However there are nonetheless tradeoffs and limitations.
We may talk about 300 ppi on 8x10, etc, but I feel "quality headroom" isClark makes reference to what I call the 300 ppi myth. Simply stated it
implies that you need 300 pixels per inch on the paper for a picture to
look photographic.
of important significance in an image capturing technology. SOmeone had
mentioned a batch of WWII frames having been discovered; blown up to
great enlargement and examined up close at teh exhibition. So maybe just
making a "satisfyingly sharp looking if examined at proper distance"
8x10" or 11x14" is not ultimately enough. Some images are timeless and
priceless. I have a few I consider very dear to me. I sure am happy I
took them with a 35mm camera with a high quality lens and ASA25 film,
rather than a circa few years back digital camera. I wish I could have
been able to afford a medium or perhaps even large format camera to take
them with. Unfortunately that was out of my range. As the masses switch
to digital cameras will (no longer mass-targeting) 35mm become gradually
out of range of a typical user (pricing aand availability wise as well as
advertisement / education), BEFORE prosumer digital cameras truly match
the quality of 35mm film process? Think about it.
FJM